{"@context": "/data/manifest/138865/a172311d2/", "@type": "sc:Manifest", "@id": "//fitdil.fitnyc.edu/iiif/record/record138865/manifest", "label": "Pick type bannerstone", "metadata": [], "description": "", "sequences": [{"@id": "//fitdil.fitnyc.edu/iiif/record/record138865", "@type": "sc:Range", "label": "Record", "canvases": [{"@id": "//fitdil.fitnyc.edu/iiif/record/canvas/record138865", "@type": "sc:Canvas", "label": ["Pick type bannerstone"], "height": 2800, "width": 4200, "images": [{"@type": "oa:Annotation", "motivation": "sc:painting", "resource": {"@id": "//fitdil.fitnyc.edu/media/iiif/138865/a172311d2", "@type": "dctypes:Image", "format": "image/jpeg", "height": 2800, "width": 4200, "service": {"@context": "http://iiif.io/api/image/2/context.json", "@id": "//fitdil.fitnyc.edu/media/iiif/138865/a172311d2", "profile": "http://iiif.io/api/image/2/level1.json"}}, "on": "//fitdil.fitnyc.edu/iiif/record/canvas/record138865"}], "metadata": [{"label": "Title", "value": "Pick type bannerstone"}, {"label": "Date", "value": "6000 - 1000 BCE"}, {"label": "Culture", "value": "Native American"}, {"label": "Period", "value": "Archaic (Native American)"}, {"label": "Category", "value": "archaeology"}, {"label": "Type", "value": "bannerstone"}, {"label": "Subject", "value": "bannerstones"}, {"label": "Materials", "value": "Banded slate"}, {"label": "Dimensions", "value": "18.7 x 3.4 cm"}, {"label": "Current site", "value": "Washington, DC, Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History"}, {"label": "Description", "value": "The Pick bannerstone was broken diagonally across the perforation either because the stone is weakest at the perforation or because it was intentionally broken as is common with bannerstones during the Archaic period. The break is along the banding which might indicate that it was struck at the perforation and broke in a perfect oval along the banding. At some point after it was broken, possibly in the Archaic period, two holes were drilled to repair the stone with some kind of plug. Both pieces were additionally glued with adhesive presumably in the 19th century. Mrs. A. E. Frazar is written on the stone."}, {"label": "Rights", "value": "This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. Images may be downloaded and used freely for teaching and personal use. Include the credit line \u201c\u00a9 Anna Blume, 2019, Courtesy of the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution\u201d along with the object\u2019s Catalog Number. Publishing of images is permitted with additional permission from the NMNH. For additional publishing questions, contact bannerstone@fitnyc.edu"}, {"label": "Additional views", "value": "A172311"}, {"label": "Identifier", "value": "A172311d2"}, {"label": "Contributor", "value": "Anna Blume"}]}]}], "result": "ok"}